The recent CBCA shortlisted Book of the Year for Younger Readers is an impressive list, not least because of the strength of the books that are Notables but didn’t make the shortlist. Younger Readers is traditionally a category of the awards that receives an enormous number of entries and it is thrilling that the quality […]
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Blog: Perpetually Adolescent (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: CBCA Notables, two wolves, Book Reviews - Childrens and Young Adult, Violet Mackerel, Joy Lawn, Withering-by-Sea, The Cleo Stories, 2015 shortlisted books, Bleakboy and Hunter Stand Out in the Rain, Figgy in the World, The Four Seasons of Lucy McKenzie, Book News, CBCA, The Simple Things, Add a tag

Blog: Perpetually Adolescent (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: friendship, growing up, Bill Condon, growing older, New Book Releases, The Simple Things, Allen & Unwin, Dimity Powell, Book Reviews - Childrens and Young Adult, Book Reviews - Fiction, elderly relatives, Add a tag
Great Aunt Lola is about to die. At least ten year-old Stephen thinks she could because she’s that old, and grumpy. And Stephen, labouring under a self and parent imposed ‘shy label’, is more than a little scared of her. He simply wants to flee, but is stuck in Aunt Lola’s house for the next three weeks until she turns eighty, or dies.
They say the simple things in life are the best, but could friendship with his elderly aunt be that easy and straightforward? Award-winning author Bill Condon convinces me it can.
Condon’s latest ‘tween’ novel, The Simple Things is for bridging the generation gap, what styling gel is for rampant adolescent hair-dos; maybe not 100% essential but essentially 100% worth the effort.
Actually, it was no effort at all to immerse myself into this heart-warming tale about letting go, facing personal doubts and overcoming uncomfortable situations. It’s a story about an only child who does what his parents tell him to do, is scared of climbing trees and doesn’t seem surrounded by an ocean of friends.
Blue, Stephen’s dog back home, is the one he misses most during his enforced exile at Aunt Lola’s place. However, he soon meets Lola’s neighbour and past flame, Norm, and Norm’s granddaughter, Allie. With their help, Stephen is able to confront a few of his short comings. He also embarks on a small sojourn of self-discovery as he learns about the simple things in life – like fishing, cricket, climbing trees and death. All this explicably pulls him closer to Aunt Lola. They form a prickly alliance, each benefitting from the other until finally they are forced to admit a deep and special friendship.
The Simple Things is ‘smiley face perfect’ (re; the wet cement moment page 127). Condon writes with unaffected adroitness, delivering this story with equal measures of gentle humour and poignancy, and just enough secrecy to entice readers to want to find out what really lurks behind Aunt Lola’s tough-guy bravado.
Condon’s characters are bright, sharply drawn individuals with enough depth to make us laugh and cry, minus the melancholy. I found Stephen’s charismatic, larrikin father and sarcasm-welding Allie most endearing along with our hesitant hero’s comical boyish charm.
The Simple Things is one of those easy to read, easy to enjoy books, so I suspect it was not that simple to write. But I for one am grateful Condon persevered as Stephen did with his aunt, for it simplifies the complexities of a young person’s relationship with themselves and their aging relative with composite grace and humour, allowing young male and female readers to value and cherish their own relatives all the better.
See why here.
Allen & Unwin February 2014
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Blog: Beth Kephart Books (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: Chanticleer, the simple things, Add a tag
I met Annika along the high plateau of Chanticleer, and she told me stories; then we walked. She has come to know this garden better than most—located the cotton flowers (white and pale pink), the butterfly on a man's blue shirt, the strange dish of red that passes for a flower in the woods, the place where the artichoke had bloomed. I told her stories of asparagus and of cutting gardens; I showed her the rock that recalls my mother, down in the bed beneath the old katsura trees: the wedge of sun between us.
This slice of afternoon had not been planned; not really. It was nearly spontaneous and might not have happened had I not decided simply to be this weekend. To finish reading one fat book, and to buy two more, to go on (as I do) with my friend Andra, who listens and understands. To make dinner something simple and to talk at length by phone with my son, who seems far away and near at once, attuned to every speck of stuff he's learning.
It's beautiful out there today. Live it, I tell myself.

Blog: Beth Kephart Books (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: Eating a Tangerine, the simple things, Add a tag
I asked Holly, who is an extraordinarily gifted photographer, to tell me what she sees when she sees a picture—what she looks for through the camera's eye.
"The simple things," she said.
Oh yeah!
To simply be? Good.
Beautifully done.
And always with the perfect accompanying picture. :)